Any thriving hobbies out there?

My middle daughter age 9 is into origami. My oldest is into guns and the military. The little guy idk, but as for me. I like to shoot pool first, work in my garden second, shoot photographs (poorly) third. My most recent endeavor is cooking. Thankfully it seems to be agreeable on most occasions.

I have managed to convinced many folks to enjoy the game of billiards and its challenge, perhaps in part of my mediocre skills, charm and good looks. Ironically in a game DOMINATED BY MEN women are the ones who can are going to be driving force.

IMHO
Later
LL

Sent from my Lumia 800 using Board Express
 
Ray, we didn't get much of a summer. Cold fall like evenings and now in Aug, we're getting the hot weather so hoping that it will extend the fishing season a little longer.

But yer correct. We are usually the first ones on the ice and the last ones to leave.

Ritchie, you'll go hunting again. I didn't do any fishing or hunting after my Brother passed. He was my Buddy just like your Dad was to you. It takes a while because the memories are strong, but it is those memories that will also bring you back.

When you go for a walk in the woods, your Dad will be walking beside you. You'll feel his presence.

I spent 35 yrs out in this neck of the woods. This is where I come to fish in the summer and winter. A quick 45 minute drive from where I live. Good memories here.

http://www.fortquappelle.com/
 
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Looks like a great place! Here's the San Juan. The website is Mike Morra's, who is a great guy and someone I have fished with on many occasions. http://www.ifly4trout.com/
I'll let you know if I'm ever in your neighborhood, Terry, and we'll tell some fish stories around the cooler for sure!
 
I take my Ferrari F355 to road race tracks,

I am an avid target shooter, and reloader,

I use several large telescopes including a 20" DOB with a plethora of accessories.
 

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Seriously, I love these threads when they pop up.

Of course, pool is one of our first loves but unless thats all we do is hang around a pool hall several times a week, (I've been known to do this), we all tend to have other interests.

Its interesting to read about other hobbies (obsessions).

I jumped (kind of got helped out a bit) of an airplane. We have a nice Drop Zone on the prairies approx 45 minutes from my house. Bucket list to do it again.

I have a nice guitar that I haven't picked up in years. Been tempted to sell it but this is also on the Bucket List. Take lessons and learn to play better than I do just messing about.

When I decided that I wanted to learn to build cues, one lathe wasn't good enuff so on number 3 now. Still years of stuff to learn but its relaxing to disappear into the Man Cave whenever the urge strikes me.

So way to go Ray. I have been watching Utube vids on how to spool a fly reel and a few on Fly Tying. I tend to be somewhat obsessive about the things that interest me so now I'm afraid that not only will I be trying my hand at Fly Fishing, I will be spending a ton on Fly making supplies.

That is a very informative site BTW. I browsed a bit and Book Marked it for reference.

I used to like to shoot skeets. Planning on re taking my classes for a PAL (in Canada).
Obviously would like to get into hunting again but bench rest also interests me.

I guess thats the best thing of getting older. That is doing interesting things takes you mind off some of the aches and pains. That and I am about half retired so have the time but not near enuff the money to delve into everything on the Bucket List.

Anyway, short story long. tell some more stories guys because I love reading about them. Hey, ya never know with me having OCD, ya just might end up costing me more money.

Ray, when I get the urge to travel west thru the Rockies, I quite often see guys Fly Fishing in streams right off the highway. This is what got me thinking about how relaxing it must be cause it looks like it is. Many times, catching fish is secondary to just being out there and casting. Many times I crack a couple of cool ones, lean back against a tree on the grass and just watch my wife fish.

Also have wondered if guys who go into the back woods to fish ever take any type of protection with them. Bears, cougars etc.

Mitch, is that a home made Telescope of some sort? You could maybe explain that one a bit more.
 
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Target shooting with .22
Benchrest/long distance shooting
IPSC pistol and rifle shooting.
 
Target shooting with .22
Benchrest/long distance shooting
IPSC pistol and rifle shooting.


Hey, Kim. Back in the day I shot IPSC with Bill Wilson, Rob Leatham, Mike Plaxco, Brian Enos, and a host of others. I also competed in IHMSA (International Handgun Metallic Silhouette Association). :)
 
I used to play a lot of competitive foosball against people who are world ranked.
dld

Competitive foosball....I bet that was a lot of fun. I have a hard enough time trying to find some non-spinners to play with.

Your not supposed to spin the d*#@ things!!!:thumbup:
 
Fishing is always great, and sometimes the catching is fun too. As you can see, Mike Morra doesn't spend a lot of time updating his website...just a few folks keep it going.
:grin:
 
I used to play a lot of competitive foosball against people who are world ranked.

A bit of history on foosball: It was huge in the '70's and '80's. The first national tourney was in ~'72. There was a tour in the later seventies that had over a million dollars in prize money. I knew a guy who had won a corvette as part of his prize money in one tourney in the late seventies. Others won porsches, pickups, etc. in addition to cash prizes. Table manufacturers took a friend of mine on a tour of Europe to expand their brand.

Now, tho, there is only one person alive who makes a full time living playing foosball. Basically the best player in the world. I can't think of another person who has dominated a sport like Frederico Colignon has dominated foosball. He was, for a long time, so far above everybody else that he would win almost everything. He would routinely go to international tourneys and win everything he entered: Open Doubles, Mixed Doubles, Singles.

There are many interesting things about foosball. It is such a combination of mental and physical that the difference between a good non-tourney player and a bad tourney player is ridiculous. There are guys who come to a weekly tourney because they are the best person in their frat house, neighborhood, dorm, whatever, and get absolutely smoked by low level tourney players.

When I first started playing foosball tourneys, I thought I knew how to play. I played two tourneys a week and practiced as much as I could, played pick-up games, etc. and I didn't win a match in a full year. There were matches where I lost two games 5-0, 5-0 and never had the ball on my front rod.

Anyhow, I digress, foosball is mostly people who played as teens in the height of foosball thirty years ago. Most of them quit playing for a long time while they raised their families.

There is a big desire and no effective action locally to get new people involved. The problem is that there aren't enough people who will take the abuse of losing so badly long enough for them to continue with the game. Couple that with the fact that these people have mostly known each other for a couple of decades or more and can be loud, angry, impatient jerks, there is little reason for new players to come back.

Foosball has one last difference: There is no standardization for tables. Everybody here likes to talk about the difference between bar boxes, diamonds, GCs, etc., but foosball is much, much different. Different tables have different shaped men, different balls (cork, rubber, hard plastic, different textures, etc.), the weight of the rods is different, the size of the goal is vastly different. Some tables have sloped corners and one goalie, others have flat corners and three goalies. Literally there are some shots and passes that a person will spend a ton of time perfecting on one table that won't work at all on another table.

If anybody is interested to see one of the top players in the world, watch this, Tony Spredeman vs. Frederico: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAeSaJgcdcc

My claim to fame is that I beat Tony in a tourney by stuffing one of his shots back into his goal. This is like a B-player beating Efren hill-hill by making a three-rail bank.

dld


I love your post and really enjoyed reading it, I played a lot during the time frame you mentioned, I remember we use to cut pieces of a bike tube and use it to slide on the rod handles for better grip, Do you remember the shot called harvy wall banger, LOL
 
I'm setting up for making Pens. I have the lathe and should be in gear this week. It is creative. No limits. Not hard to learn. Instant gratification.
Also buying cue lathe next month for repairs and refinshing. Doing that simply for fun and hobby.
My buddy made a Pool Cue pen for me. It has inlays and represents a cue I have. I'll post pics soon.
Can also make custom dart bodies with the lathe.
 
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Like a lot of us here I get caught up in the discussions about what's wrong with pool and how to save it. There's a place for that but I'm curious what other hobbies you guys have and whether they are thriving, attracting more people, or if you find yourself in similar "how do we draw more people into basket weaving!" discussions.

I write music, see the link to my page in my sig.
I also paint and enjoy cooking and landscape photography. I play tennis.

There are lots of musicians in many different genres and I think it's a rather stable hobby.
Likewise for photography and painting though perhaps fewer dedicated hobbyists. Tennis seems to be regional. Here in the Atlanta area we have a good local tennis association. Atlanta Lawn and Tennis Association (ALTA) that organizes Mens, Ladies and MIxed leagues around various communities and clubs that have courts.

Cooking may be the most popular hobby aside from eating which i'm not sure would qualify as a hobby but it might be up there with drinking in terms of total number of participants :)

It will be interesting to see what everyone lists as their hobbies.
 
Like a lot of us here I get caught up in the discussions about what's wrong with pool and how to save it. There's a place for that but I'm curious what other hobbies you guys have and whether they are thriving, attracting more people, or if you find yourself in similar "how do we draw more people into basket weaving!" discussions.


Darts's is rocking in Europe, the numbers of people at the venue is massive as are the TV audiences, easy to understand fun/amusing to watch. Pool isnt, unless you have played for 6-12 months.
 
Pool,,Fly Fishing,,camping and Guitar Picking,,I'm Guitar Poor right now--everything from Nationals to Martins and ventage Fenders
 
I was heavy into poker for a couple years. The live game is still really strong, but the online game has gone way downhill. It's become such a grind to play low and midstakes, table after table of software using grinders(myself included, I'm not judging) beating the fish into a pulp.The online poker economy post Black Friday is very different, and not nearly as much fun for me.

I collect, refinish and build guitars. I think this hobby is pretty stable. For me right now it's great, the U.S. economy has put a large amount of high end guitars on the second hand market for great prices. Me and my wife go to the states 2-3 times a year. Normally, I purchase a couple off Craigslist while there. Savings come pretty close to paying for our vacation.

P.C. Gaming. This hobby is strong. People outgrow it, but always get replaced by a younger generation. My kids are more into it nowadays then me, but I still love the actual act of building a gaming computer.

Powerlifting. This hobby is just like pool. Multiple federations, way too many classes and different rules. What suits are you allowed? What constitutes raw lifting? What is parallel?Drug free competitions filled with drug users. Even in my small province, there are 3 guys who claim the provincial squat record. I don't even try follow it any more. I accomplished what I wanted, now I just try stay in shape.
 
Traditional shaving...

...has increased in popularity to such a degree that some of the more well-established vendors actually have waiting lists. I've been a fan for several years now, probably in part because it has a "collecting" aspect to it (Straight razors, handmade brushes, shaving scuttles, etc.) that's very similar to custom cues.

As far as drawing a younger audience goes, it actually seems to be the younger crowd that drives the demand.

On a side note, I've also recently developed an interest in drinking different teas and coffees, but I'm finding out I make a terrible barista. That seems like a drawback. :p

Have a great day all!

- Paul
 
I also do some fishing. Have a Bass Tracker and a 22' Pontoon. Bass Tracker when there is two of us and the Pontoon when more of us are going out. We eat a lot of fish so the hobby makes sense. So, during the nice weather I will be fishing at the lakes, and during the cold weather, I will be fishing in the pool halls!


If at first you don't succeed, next time do it right!
 
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